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This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print. Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.
Stock ownership --- Business. --- Economics.
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Beneficial ownership --- Stock ownership --- Disclosure of information --- Law and legislation.
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Home ownership --- Homeowners --- Home ownership --- Social aspects --- Social aspects.
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Beneficial ownership --- Stock ownership --- Disclosure of information --- Law and legislation.
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With a growing prominence of sophisticated econometric research in a much-expanded field of New Economics ofParticipation (NEP), it is of particular value to learn about real-world examples of participatory and labor-managed firms in the advanced market economies through extensive case studies. In this volume of 'Advances in the Economic Analysis of Participatory and Labor-Managed Firms', the authors present such case studies. The real-world examples of participatory organizations described vividly in this volume will help researchers in NEP to design empirical strategies better, and to interpret their econometric results more sensibly. Furthermore, they will help policymakers and practitioners in their efforts to construct better public policy and design management practices.
Management --- Employee ownership --- Employee participation
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Employee ownership --- Efficiency wage theory --- Labor contract
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Assets generate and help diversify income, provide collateral to access credit, alleviate liquidity constraints in the face of shocks, and are key inputs into empowerment. Despite the importance of individual-level data on asset ownership and control, and that most assets are owned by individuals, solely or jointly, it is typical for the micro data on asset ownership to be collected at the household level, often from only one respondent per household. Even when the data are collected at the individual level, with identification of reported or documented owners of a given asset within the household, the information is still often solicited from a single respondent. Further, the identification of owners is seldom paired with the identification of individuals who hold various rights to assets, limiting understanding of the interrelationships among ownership and rights, and whether these relationships vary across individuals. Through a review of the existing approaches to data collection and the relevant literature on survey methodology, this paper presents an overview of the current best practices for collecting individual-level data on the ownership and control of assets in household and farm surveys. The paper provides recommendations in three areas: (1) respondent selection; (2) definition and measurement of assess to and ownership and control of assets; and (3) measurement of the quantity, value, and quality of assets. Open methodological questions that can be answered through analysis of existing data or the collection and analysis of new data are identified for future research.
Asset Ownership --- Household Surveys --- Survey Methodology --- Wealth
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Retail trade --- Ownership. --- Ownership of retail trade --- Stores, Retail --- Ownership --- Financial risk. --- Industrial laws and legislation. --- Industries --- Business risk (Finance) --- Money risk (Finance) --- Risk --- Law and legislation
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Housing development --- Home ownership --- Housing policy --- Government policy
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Housing development --- Home ownership --- Housing policy --- Government policy
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